Tag Archives: Hillary Clinton

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The cover of this morning’s New York Post

…First, her team says nothing as it sneaks her from the 9/11 ceremony — after she nearly collapses. It later claims she was “overheated” and parades her outside her daughter’s place, where she claims she feels “much better.”

And has the candidate — a possibly infectious pneumonia case — hug a child to make the lie seem cute.

It adds up to hours of effort to deceive — even enlisting federal officers in the effort. That’s the bottom line of The Post’s scoop, thanks to sources who revealed that she was headed to the ER, as Secret Service protocols demand — until her staff insisted otherwise, for fear hospital staff might leak word of her illness.

It seems Team Hillary saw the risk of disclosure as worse than the risk to her health.

Team Hillary’s biggest health problem is compulsive lying (New York Post)

Meanwhile…

Anderson Cooper: “So, let me ask you about that because [Democrat strategist] David Axelrod was very critical of the way that you and your campaign handled sharing your diagnosis with the public. He tweeted: “Antibiotics can take care of pneumonia. What’s the cure for an unhealthy penchant for privacy that repeatedly creates unnecessary problems?” Why not just say on Friday as you said apparently to Senator [Chuck] Schumer on Sunday, you know, “I have pneumonia, folks, I’m going to power through it”? Why keep it a secret?”

Hillary Clinton:
“Well, I just didn’t think it was going to be that big a deal. You know, I know Chuck said today he didn’t tell anybody. It’s just the kind of thing that if it happens to you and you’re a busy, active person, you keep moving forward. And, you know, I think it’s fair to say, Anderson, that people know more about me than almost anyone in public life. They’ve got 40 years of my tax returns, tens of thousands of emails, a detailed medical letter report, all kinds of personal details. And, you know, it’s just so — it’s so strange that with all of that information out there, and as soon it became clear I couldn’t power through, we, you know, we said what was going on.”

Hillary Clinton calling into the Anderson Cooper’s CNN show last night

Hillary Clinton’s response to Anderson Cooper shows she still doesn’t get it on her health scare (The Fix, Washington Post)

Yesterday: Oh Say, Can’t You See?

Meanwhile…

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Ah here.

AF Branco

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Hillary Clinton leaving yesterday’s 9/11 tribute in New York

An ailing candidate and the mainstream media in denial.

Thud.

Emmy award-winning investigative journalist Sharyl Attkisson writes:

I watched the video of Hillary Clinton as she faltered, slumped and then apparently got dragged into her van, and I felt awful. Public officials put themselves in the public eye, but to have every step and misstep analysed the way we do today seems to be a no-win situation.

I wouldn’t want someone videotaping me when I had a migraine headache or – as I did several times in my 20’s working in Florida–became faint and dehydrated. I join with many Americans who wish Clinton the best, and a speedy recovery from what her doctors say is a case of pneumonia and dehydration.

But the incident raises questions about the news media’s coverage surrounding Clinton’s health.

Rather than reporting the facts, many in the media have taken it upon themselves to shout down the questions and to controversialise those asking them.

On August 21, after Donald Trump adviser Rudolph Giuliani suggested people research Clinton’s medical state on Google, a New York Times tech columnist [Farhad Manjoo] retorted in a tweet:

“Google should fix this. It shouldn’t give quarter to conspiracy theorists.”

In other words, the columnist was advocating that a conspiracy be committed to stop people from researching Clinton’s health, which he labeled a conspiracy.

Many others in the media also chimed in using the “conspiracy theory” moniker. It’s designed to convince the public to tune out the discussion, in much the same way as other common astroturf terms such as “debunked,” “bonkers,” “tin-foil hat,” “shoddy,” “discredited,” “quack,” “bogus,” “denier,” and “crank.”

Left-wing apparatus Vox chimed in with an article titled: “The bonkers conspiracy theory about Hillary Clinton’s health.”

The pro-Hillary Clinton smear machine, Media Matters, chided NBC News for “mainstreaming conspiracy theories about Hillary Clinton’s health.”

Vice picked up the theme writing, “How conspiracy theories about Hillary Clinton’s health went mainstream.”

CNN published an article “Debunking conspiracy theories” about her health. CNN media critic Brian Stelter urged the media: “Do Not Give Oxygen To ‘Conspiracy Theories’ That Hillary Clinton Is ‘Secretly Ill’.”

HuffPost wrote, “Let’s call the conspiracy theories about Clinton’s health what they are…”

ThinkProgress joined in with, “Trump campaign embraces conspiracy theory…”

From MSNBC: “Trump, allies push conspiracy theory about Clinton’s health.” NPR: “Trump adds fuel to conspiracy theory about Clinton’s health.”

You get the idea. Everybody’s on the same page.

In fact, questions about Clinton’s health, whether grounded or far-fetched, had little to do with supposed conspiracies.

Yesterday, a Washington Post reporter [Chris Cillizza] acknowledged that he, too, had recently argued the discussion was “the stuff of conspiracy theorists.”

But now, in the face of the obvious, he agrees there are legitimate concerns.

“Coughing, I wrote, is simply not evidence enough of any sort of major illness that Clinton is assumed to be hiding. Neither, of course, is feeling “overheated.” But those two things happening within six days of each other to a candidate who is 68 years old makes talk of Clinton’s health no longer just the stuff of conspiracy theorists.”

In other words, all this was “the stuff of conspiracy theorists” until the reporters who appear to have been proven wrong, decided it was not.

It’s almost as if we in the media take an editorial position with no factual basis, dare critics to prove us wrong, and then when events do, we modify our stance.

That’s not what the news is supposed to do. Reporters are, ideally, supposed to bring facts to light.

If we relegate our role to one of spinning and trying to convince the public of our position; then end up bringing up the rear after-the-fact, what good are we?

The News Media’s Miscalculation on Hillary’s Health (Sharyl Attkisson)

Previously: It’s Criminal What We Don’t Know

Pic: Getty

Meanwhile…

Hmmm.

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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g95KRpSTujg

 

‘Stew in SF’ writes:

If you feel you’re not getting the full picture about the American election and If you have a spare 30 minutes this weekend can I recommend to your readers this excellent rant.. [Political and media analyst] Lionel skewers Hillary’s health, the Clinton Foundation, ‘boorish’ Donald Trump, self styled ‘Libertarian’ Gary Johnson (top left), mainstream vs alternative media and even dope smokers…

FIGHT!

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Judith Goldberger writes:

Perhaps Broadsheet readers can tell me how [Political commenter] Noel Whelan of the Irish TImes got to write this article (‘Why I Can’t Accept Hillary Clinton’s Invitation’) – and why. When you sign up for HillaryClinton.com you are asked if you are a U.S. voter resident in the U.S. or an “American Abroad” (myself). So, what did Noel Whelan tell the Hillary folks he was? Has be clarified since? BTW, If you donate from outside the US, you’re required to verify your identity and status as an American Abroad. See above email sent to me….

Anyone?

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Martin O’Malley playing ‘celtic rock’ in 1999

In a lengthy profile the Times reporter Jason Horowitz says the 51-year old with Mayo and Galway roots “positions himself as the party’s fresh alternative to the 67-year-old Mrs. Clinton.”
The article follows O’Malley as he plays a gig with his Celtic rock band O’Malley’s March, sips Guinness, campaigns in South Carolina and gives every indication that he will challenge the frontrunner.

Twang.

O’Malley to jump into presidential race against Hillary Clinton (irish Central)

Martin O’Malley, a Hillary Clinton Loyalist, Is Now a Potential 2016 Alternative (Jason Horowitz, New York Times) 

Pic: Baltimore Sun